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| Artist: | Takehisa Yumeji (1884-1934) — 竹久夢二 |
| Title: | The Rising Moon — 月の出 |
| Series: | |
| Date of first edition?: | Not set |
| Date of this artwork?: | 1950s (may not be accurate) |
| Publisher (first edition)?: | Not Set |
| Publisher (this edition)?: | Kyoto Hanga-In — 京都版画院 |
| Medium (first edition): | Woodblock |
| Medium (this edition): | Woodblock |
| Format (first edition): | Not Set
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| Format (this edition): | Double Oban |
| DB artwork code: | 43269 |
| Notes (first edition)?: |
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| Notes (this edition)?: |
The following information was taken from the original web listing of this artwork. Note that there may be some inaccuracies:
木版画作品。 シートサイズ(10号) 52x40cm。 版上サイン。 ed.65/300。 作品には、少々の端小折れがあります。 シートでの出品です。 |
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| Artist Bio: |
Takehisa Yumeji (1884-1934) was a leading figure in the Taisho Romanticism movement that combined Western romanticism with native Japanese styles during the Taisho Period (1912-1926). He was a painter, writer, poet, bookbinder and illustrator whose drawings of women with thin bodies and large eyes filled with melancholy were known as Yumeji Bijin-ga. During the height of his popularity he was called the “modern Utamaro” and the Japanese “Toulouse-Lautrec and Edvard Munch”. His prints epitomized the relationship between popular art and the woodblock.
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